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Allegiance and Identity in a Globalised World.

By: Contributor(s): Material type: TextSeries: Publisher: Cambridge : Cambridge University Press, 2014Copyright date: ©2014Edition: 1st edDescription: 1 online resource (698 pages)Content type:
  • text
Media type:
  • computer
Carrier type:
  • online resource
ISBN:
  • 9781316121665
Subject(s): Genre/Form: DDC classification:
  • 323.6
Online resources:
Contents:
Cover -- ALLEGIANCE AND IDENTITY IN A GLOBALISED WORLD -- Series Page -- Title -- Copyright -- CONTENTS -- CONTRIBUTORS -- SERIES EDITORS' PREFACE -- EDITORS' PREFACE -- 1: Introduction: allegiance and identity in a globalised world -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Allegiance and identity -- 3. Structure of the volume -- 4. Conclusion -- PART I: Constitutional legal foundations -- 2: Identity at the edge of the constitutional community -- 1. Introduction -- 2. 'The people' of the Australian Constitution -- 3. 'The people' of the territories -- 4. Factors affecting membership -- 5. Legally ascribed identity - notions of allegiance -- 6. Cultural identification of 'the people' -- 7. From territories to the Commonwealth and beyond - ideas of membership -- 3: An odd partnership: identity-based constitutional claims in modern democracy -- 1. Introduction -- 2. A methodological overview -- 3. The normative case against nationalism: two critiques -- 4. Conclusion: arguments for and against identity-based constitutional claims -- 4: Reconciling regional autonomy with national sovereignty: what does China mean to Hong Kong? -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Constitutional foundations to Hong Kong's autonomy and China's sovereignty -- 3. Constitutional interpretations of the Basic Law -- 4. Constitutional and legislative reform: national security and democracy -- 5. Conclusion -- 5: Is Europe still worth fighting for? Allegiance, identity and integration paradigms revisited -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Original integration paradigms -- 3. Midlife crisis: challenges today -- 4. Reviving ideals, revisiting paradigms -- 5. Conclusion: allegiance and identity in evolution -- PART II: Indigenous and customary law -- 6: (Em)placing law: migration, belonging and place in Solomon Islands -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Debates about freedom of movement (Rebecca Monson).
3. One view of freedom of movement under customary law (George Hoa'au) -- 4. Emplacing Law(yers) (Rebecca Monson) -- 7: Does law constitute identity? Indigenous allegiance and identity in Australia -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Indigenous identity in a theoretical context -- 3. The undead -- 4. Silent dreaming: identity and the individual -- 5. Defining 'native' in native title jurisprudence -- 6. Without title: Who are the Yorta Yorta people? -- 7. 'Traditional' Indigenous society circumscribed by non-Indigenous law -- 8. Concluding observations about the limits of the law -- PART III: Social inclusion and exclusion -- 8: Pledging allegiance: the strangers inside democracy and citizenship -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Allegiance and the stranger -- 3. Pledging allegiance -- 4. Liberalism and culture -- 5. Allegiance and transformation -- 9: When immigrants and converts are not truly one of us: examining the social psychology of marginalising racism -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Social identity and self-categorisation theories: psychological groups and social reality -- 3. From social identity processes to marginalising racism -- 3. The place of marginalising racism in theoretical space -- 4. On related social-psychological processes -- 5. A first experimental social-psychological analysis: rhetorical definitions of 'us' -- 6. A second experimental social-psychological analysis: the impact of audiences -- 7. Conclusions -- 10: Diversity, national identity and social cohesion: welfare redistribution and national defence -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Welfare redistribution -- 3. Defence of the state -- 4. Conclusion -- PART IV: National security concerns and counter-terrorism law -- 11: The security of citizenship?: Finnis in the context of the United Kingdom's citizenship stripping provisions -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Finnis' understanding of citizenship.
3. The 'public good' ground for deprivation of citizenship -- 4. Citizenship as identity -- 5. Conclusions -- 12: Political criminals, terrorists and extra-criminal regimes of punishment -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Breaking the original contract: the theoretical rationale for extra-criminal punishment -- 3. The notion of Feindstrafrecht -- 6. Conclusion -- 13: Dangerous intersection: migration and counter-terrorism laws in the case of Dr Mohamed Haneef -- 1. Introduction: character, terrorism and guilt by association -- 2. Case study: Dr Haneef -- 3. Possible implications of new counter-terrorism laws -- 4. The character test for deportability -- 5. Implications of the Haneef case -- 6. Can character be rehabilitated? -- 6. Conclusion -- PART V: Forced and voluntary migration, refugees and children -- 14: Recognition and narrative identities: is refugee law redeemable? -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Setting the scene - refugee law principles and processes -- 3. The refugee and human rights narratives - contrasts and contexts -- 4. Finding a meaningful narrative identity in the categories of refugee law -- 5. Expressing a narrative - alienation or autonomy in the recognition of the legal person -- 6. Conclusion -- 15: Myth-conceiving sovereignty: the legacy of the nineteenth century -- 1. Introduction -- 2. New migrations, new communities -- 3. Migration and community -- 4. A trajectory of migration law -- 5. Conclusion -- 16: Betrayal and broken ties: British child migrants to Australia, citizenship and identity -- 1. Introduction -- 2. British child migrants -- 3. Childhood without citizenship -- 4. The significance and absence of citizenship in adulthood -- 5. Breaking and recreating identity -- 6. Children, citizenship and identity in the twenty first century: learning lessons from the past? -- 7. Some concluding comments.
PART VI: Temporary or permanent labour migration -- 17: Temporary migration, identity and allegiance -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Allegiance, culture and identity in liberal theory -- 3. Allegiance, culture, identity and temporary migration -- 4. Temporary migration projects -- 5. Differential rights, allegiance and reciprocity -- 6. Conclusion -- 18: Transnational labour migrants: whose responsibility? -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Citizenship and foreign workers in Singapore and Malaysia -- 3. Labour: arguments for citizenship from workers' and labour rights perspectives -- 4. Conclusion -- PART VII: Transnational and international legal perspectives -- 19: The complicated case of Stern Hu: allegiance, identity and nationality in a globalised world -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Who's Hu? -- 3. Multiple allegiances, multiple betrayals -- 4. Hu still calls Australia home? -- 5. Duty of Australia to Hu -- 6. The Stern Hu trial -- 7. The Australia/China transfer of sentenced prisoners -- 8. Implementing the political rhetoric -- 9. Rethinking allegiance, identity and nationality -- 10. The need for a reconceptualisation of the legal order -- 20: The end of Olympic nationality -- 1. Introduction -- 2. The regime of Olympic nationality -- 3. Olympic nationality under stress -- 4. The problematics of restoring Olympic nationality -- 5. Rebutting the commodification objection -- 6. W(h)ither Olympic nationality? -- 7. Conclusion: Olympic nationality and the postnational future -- 21: The perils of judicial construction of identity - a critical analysis of the International Criminal Tribunal for the Former Yugoslavia's jurisprudence on protected persons -- 1. Introduction -- 2. The personal scope of application of Geneva Convention IV -- 3. The Tribunal's jurisprudence concerning the interpretation of the nationality requirement of Article 4 of Geneva Convention IV.
4. A critical analysis of the jurisprudence of the International Criminal Tribunal for the Former Yugoslavia -- 5. Nationality and citizenship under general international law -- 6. The concept of nationality and allegiance in international humanitarian law -- 7. Teleological interpretation of Article 4 -- 8. Policy considerations of the expansive interpretation of Article 4 of Geneva Convention IV -- 9. Conclusion -- 22: Primordialism and otherness: the 'ethnic' underpinning of 'minority' in international law -- 1. Introduction -- 2. 'Ethnicity' as a primordial tie -- 3. 'Ethnicity' as 'otherness' -- 4. Ethnic 'otherness' in the perception of the 'minority' -- 5. Conclusion: what does the ethnic notion of the minority mean to minority 'protection'? -- 23: The relevance of nationality in the age of Google, Skype and Facebook -- 1. Setting the context -- 2. The concepts of nationality and citizenship -- 3. The Nottebohm Case -- 4. The 'effective nationality' test and its limitations -- 5. The relevance of nationality: globalisation, and the changed role of the individual -- 6. Nationality: a fluid concept? -- 7. Conclusion -- 24: Concluding remarks: inequality as a threat to allegiance -- 1. Rawls's idea for how to sustain the allegiance of political losers in domestic society -- 2. Rawls's analogous idea for how to sustain the allegiance of political losers in international society -- 3. How Rawls's domestic solution fails -- 4. How Rawls's international solution fails analogously -- 5. The domestic challenge of regulatory capture with increasing socioeconomic inequality -- 6. The national moral impartiality requirement -- 7. International regulatory capture and a globalimpartiality requirement -- 8. Outlook -- BIBLIOGRAPHY -- Books/Monographs/Journal Articles -- Judicial Decisions -- Legislation -- Official Publications -- International Materials.
Treaties.
Summary: This examination of allegiance and identity renews our understanding of membership and participation within and beyond the nation-state, and provides valuable insights into the changing dynamics of national identity, membership and social inclusion in the context of globalisation.
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Cover -- ALLEGIANCE AND IDENTITY IN A GLOBALISED WORLD -- Series Page -- Title -- Copyright -- CONTENTS -- CONTRIBUTORS -- SERIES EDITORS' PREFACE -- EDITORS' PREFACE -- 1: Introduction: allegiance and identity in a globalised world -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Allegiance and identity -- 3. Structure of the volume -- 4. Conclusion -- PART I: Constitutional legal foundations -- 2: Identity at the edge of the constitutional community -- 1. Introduction -- 2. 'The people' of the Australian Constitution -- 3. 'The people' of the territories -- 4. Factors affecting membership -- 5. Legally ascribed identity - notions of allegiance -- 6. Cultural identification of 'the people' -- 7. From territories to the Commonwealth and beyond - ideas of membership -- 3: An odd partnership: identity-based constitutional claims in modern democracy -- 1. Introduction -- 2. A methodological overview -- 3. The normative case against nationalism: two critiques -- 4. Conclusion: arguments for and against identity-based constitutional claims -- 4: Reconciling regional autonomy with national sovereignty: what does China mean to Hong Kong? -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Constitutional foundations to Hong Kong's autonomy and China's sovereignty -- 3. Constitutional interpretations of the Basic Law -- 4. Constitutional and legislative reform: national security and democracy -- 5. Conclusion -- 5: Is Europe still worth fighting for? Allegiance, identity and integration paradigms revisited -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Original integration paradigms -- 3. Midlife crisis: challenges today -- 4. Reviving ideals, revisiting paradigms -- 5. Conclusion: allegiance and identity in evolution -- PART II: Indigenous and customary law -- 6: (Em)placing law: migration, belonging and place in Solomon Islands -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Debates about freedom of movement (Rebecca Monson).

3. One view of freedom of movement under customary law (George Hoa'au) -- 4. Emplacing Law(yers) (Rebecca Monson) -- 7: Does law constitute identity? Indigenous allegiance and identity in Australia -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Indigenous identity in a theoretical context -- 3. The undead -- 4. Silent dreaming: identity and the individual -- 5. Defining 'native' in native title jurisprudence -- 6. Without title: Who are the Yorta Yorta people? -- 7. 'Traditional' Indigenous society circumscribed by non-Indigenous law -- 8. Concluding observations about the limits of the law -- PART III: Social inclusion and exclusion -- 8: Pledging allegiance: the strangers inside democracy and citizenship -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Allegiance and the stranger -- 3. Pledging allegiance -- 4. Liberalism and culture -- 5. Allegiance and transformation -- 9: When immigrants and converts are not truly one of us: examining the social psychology of marginalising racism -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Social identity and self-categorisation theories: psychological groups and social reality -- 3. From social identity processes to marginalising racism -- 3. The place of marginalising racism in theoretical space -- 4. On related social-psychological processes -- 5. A first experimental social-psychological analysis: rhetorical definitions of 'us' -- 6. A second experimental social-psychological analysis: the impact of audiences -- 7. Conclusions -- 10: Diversity, national identity and social cohesion: welfare redistribution and national defence -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Welfare redistribution -- 3. Defence of the state -- 4. Conclusion -- PART IV: National security concerns and counter-terrorism law -- 11: The security of citizenship?: Finnis in the context of the United Kingdom's citizenship stripping provisions -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Finnis' understanding of citizenship.

3. The 'public good' ground for deprivation of citizenship -- 4. Citizenship as identity -- 5. Conclusions -- 12: Political criminals, terrorists and extra-criminal regimes of punishment -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Breaking the original contract: the theoretical rationale for extra-criminal punishment -- 3. The notion of Feindstrafrecht -- 6. Conclusion -- 13: Dangerous intersection: migration and counter-terrorism laws in the case of Dr Mohamed Haneef -- 1. Introduction: character, terrorism and guilt by association -- 2. Case study: Dr Haneef -- 3. Possible implications of new counter-terrorism laws -- 4. The character test for deportability -- 5. Implications of the Haneef case -- 6. Can character be rehabilitated? -- 6. Conclusion -- PART V: Forced and voluntary migration, refugees and children -- 14: Recognition and narrative identities: is refugee law redeemable? -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Setting the scene - refugee law principles and processes -- 3. The refugee and human rights narratives - contrasts and contexts -- 4. Finding a meaningful narrative identity in the categories of refugee law -- 5. Expressing a narrative - alienation or autonomy in the recognition of the legal person -- 6. Conclusion -- 15: Myth-conceiving sovereignty: the legacy of the nineteenth century -- 1. Introduction -- 2. New migrations, new communities -- 3. Migration and community -- 4. A trajectory of migration law -- 5. Conclusion -- 16: Betrayal and broken ties: British child migrants to Australia, citizenship and identity -- 1. Introduction -- 2. British child migrants -- 3. Childhood without citizenship -- 4. The significance and absence of citizenship in adulthood -- 5. Breaking and recreating identity -- 6. Children, citizenship and identity in the twenty first century: learning lessons from the past? -- 7. Some concluding comments.

PART VI: Temporary or permanent labour migration -- 17: Temporary migration, identity and allegiance -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Allegiance, culture and identity in liberal theory -- 3. Allegiance, culture, identity and temporary migration -- 4. Temporary migration projects -- 5. Differential rights, allegiance and reciprocity -- 6. Conclusion -- 18: Transnational labour migrants: whose responsibility? -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Citizenship and foreign workers in Singapore and Malaysia -- 3. Labour: arguments for citizenship from workers' and labour rights perspectives -- 4. Conclusion -- PART VII: Transnational and international legal perspectives -- 19: The complicated case of Stern Hu: allegiance, identity and nationality in a globalised world -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Who's Hu? -- 3. Multiple allegiances, multiple betrayals -- 4. Hu still calls Australia home? -- 5. Duty of Australia to Hu -- 6. The Stern Hu trial -- 7. The Australia/China transfer of sentenced prisoners -- 8. Implementing the political rhetoric -- 9. Rethinking allegiance, identity and nationality -- 10. The need for a reconceptualisation of the legal order -- 20: The end of Olympic nationality -- 1. Introduction -- 2. The regime of Olympic nationality -- 3. Olympic nationality under stress -- 4. The problematics of restoring Olympic nationality -- 5. Rebutting the commodification objection -- 6. W(h)ither Olympic nationality? -- 7. Conclusion: Olympic nationality and the postnational future -- 21: The perils of judicial construction of identity - a critical analysis of the International Criminal Tribunal for the Former Yugoslavia's jurisprudence on protected persons -- 1. Introduction -- 2. The personal scope of application of Geneva Convention IV -- 3. The Tribunal's jurisprudence concerning the interpretation of the nationality requirement of Article 4 of Geneva Convention IV.

4. A critical analysis of the jurisprudence of the International Criminal Tribunal for the Former Yugoslavia -- 5. Nationality and citizenship under general international law -- 6. The concept of nationality and allegiance in international humanitarian law -- 7. Teleological interpretation of Article 4 -- 8. Policy considerations of the expansive interpretation of Article 4 of Geneva Convention IV -- 9. Conclusion -- 22: Primordialism and otherness: the 'ethnic' underpinning of 'minority' in international law -- 1. Introduction -- 2. 'Ethnicity' as a primordial tie -- 3. 'Ethnicity' as 'otherness' -- 4. Ethnic 'otherness' in the perception of the 'minority' -- 5. Conclusion: what does the ethnic notion of the minority mean to minority 'protection'? -- 23: The relevance of nationality in the age of Google, Skype and Facebook -- 1. Setting the context -- 2. The concepts of nationality and citizenship -- 3. The Nottebohm Case -- 4. The 'effective nationality' test and its limitations -- 5. The relevance of nationality: globalisation, and the changed role of the individual -- 6. Nationality: a fluid concept? -- 7. Conclusion -- 24: Concluding remarks: inequality as a threat to allegiance -- 1. Rawls's idea for how to sustain the allegiance of political losers in domestic society -- 2. Rawls's analogous idea for how to sustain the allegiance of political losers in international society -- 3. How Rawls's domestic solution fails -- 4. How Rawls's international solution fails analogously -- 5. The domestic challenge of regulatory capture with increasing socioeconomic inequality -- 6. The national moral impartiality requirement -- 7. International regulatory capture and a globalimpartiality requirement -- 8. Outlook -- BIBLIOGRAPHY -- Books/Monographs/Journal Articles -- Judicial Decisions -- Legislation -- Official Publications -- International Materials.

Treaties.

This examination of allegiance and identity renews our understanding of membership and participation within and beyond the nation-state, and provides valuable insights into the changing dynamics of national identity, membership and social inclusion in the context of globalisation.

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